Lydia Rycroft is a geoscientist on TNO’s subsurface team in Utrecht, Netherlands (part of the Geological Survey of the Netherlands). She has a Master’s Degree in Geology from Imperial College London having also spent a year studying Earth Sciences abroad at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her Master’s dissertation was based on convective flow in porous media where she designed an experiment to study the convective dissolution of CO2 into brine at the Qatar Carbonate and Carbon Storage Research Centre. Following graduation, she spent 3 years working for the International Energy Agency’s Greenhouse Gas R&D program (IEAGHG) developing knowledge on CCUS deployment internationally. Her current work at TNO covers various technical and regulatory aspects of CO2 transport and storage with a focus on European developments and the Dutch North Sea sector. Filip Neele is the lead scientist on CO2 transport and storage on TNO’s subsurface team in Utrecht. He holds a PhD in seismology from Utrecht University. He has been active in the field of CCS since 2006 and has set up and led projects that cover a wide range of topics in CO2 transport and storage, such as regional screening studies for CO2 storage capacity and detailed storage feasibility assessments. He has a keen interest in CCS network development, in the role that ship transport can play and in the evolution of multi-asset storage networks. He is currently working on effective and efficient approaches to monitoring operational CO2 projects.